Midwood High School
Midwood High School is a high school located at 2839 Bedford Avenue in Brooklyn, New York City, administered by the New York City Department of Education. It has an enrollment of 3,938 students. Its H-shaped building, with six Ionic columns and a Georgian cupola, was constructed in 1940 as part of the Works Projects Administration.
Academics
Ranking
Students from the two selective programs often attend top-ranked colleges, many on significant scholarships. Typically, the school sends around 3% of its seniors to Ivy League colleges, and 10% of seniors to colleges such as New York University, Boston College, and Johns Hopkins University. The average SAT scores in Midwood High School were 530 Verbal, 610 Math, and 570 Writing.The New York Times reported in 1986, that:
"Getting into Midwood High School... is about as easy as getting into an Ivy League college. More than 12,000 eager eighth graders applied this year for 450 fall openings in Midwood's highly touted programs in the medical sciences and humanities."
In the 1986–87 and 1997–98 school years, Midwood High School was recognized as a Blue Ribbon School of Excellence by the United States Department of Education and was chosen as a "School of Excellence" by U.S. News & World Report.
Population
As of the 2014–15 school year, the school had an enrollment of 3,785 students and 160.4 classroom teachers, for a student–teacher ratio of 23.6:1. There were 1,849 students eligible for free lunch and 180 eligible for reduced-cost lunch.The school occupies a building designed to hold 2,800 students, with an enrollment nearly 1,000 larger. Renowned for its diversity, Midwood students are made up of about 37% Asians, 30% African-American, 24% Whites, 7% Hispanic and 2% Native Americans and other races.
Classes are held in three overlapping sessions, with students arriving and departing at different times. Band practice starts at 8 a.m. and the first group of students breaks for lunch at 8:50 a.m. Advanced Placement courses are in such high demand that an applicant has to have nearly perfect grades to gain admittance.
A new science annex, built across the streets from the original building, opened in the summer of 2008 which can ease the overcrowd problem. The building houses new science labs that replaced the antiquated labs in the original building. The annex also hosts a new library; the library in the original building is now split into two classrooms. The annex is connected to the southern end of the original building by a glass bridge that connects the second and third floors of the buildings.
CUNY Brooklyn College partnership
Midwood High School is the affiliated campus high school of Brooklyn College, a partnership which began with the 1984-85 academic year. It was one of the earliest New York City public high schools to partner a four-year college in the City College of New York system. The campus high school project reflects the college's continuing concern for strengthening public secondary education and building professional working relationships between its faculty and teachers in the city's schools. Its goal is to strengthen the preparation of Midwood High School students for college and expand the constituency from which those students are drawn.In this partnership, Midwood High School remains under the jurisdiction of the New York City Department of Education. In matters of curriculum design, school organization and high school–college articulation, the president of Brooklyn College maintains contact with the chancellor of the New York City public schools, the High School Division of the Department of Education and the Midwood High School principal." In addition, Students are able to take classes at Brooklyn College and other Colleges in the CUNY system, free of charge, through the College Now program. Through this program, students can obtain both high school and college credits.
Classes
Advanced Placement courses
Midwood offers 22 Advanced Placement courses, and 5 years ago the school's AP courses offerings were listed by the College Board as among the best in the nation. A high percentage of the students sign up for the Advanced Placement exams, and score in the Upper Quartile. Due to a high demand by students to take AP courses, students are required to apply for AP classes in the spring and go through a competitive academic review process in order to be accepted into AP classes:- AP Art History
- AP Biology
- AP Calculus AB
- AP Calculus BC
- AP Capstone
- AP Chemistry
- AP Computer Science A
- AP English Literature
- AP English Language and Composition
- AP Environmental Science
- AP European History
- AP Human Geography
- AP Macroeconomics
- AP Physics 1
- AP Physics 2
- AP Psychology
- AP Spanish
- AP Statistics
- AP U.S. Government & Politics
- AP United States History
- AP World History
Special programs
The Medical Science Institute is for students interested in science or the medical field along with mathematical interests. It requires 6 terms of science and 6 terms of math and 6 terms of a foreign language. As of 2011, incoming freshman of the Medical Science Institute must choose from three different tracks: Medical, the Research, or Engineering. The Science Research Program also has its own website, which is part of the main school website.
The Humanities Institute is for students interested in English language arts, literature, languages, and social studies. It requires two foreign languages, including 2 terms of Latin and 6 terms of another foreign language. Also, 8 terms of English, and 8 terms of social studies. The Humanities Institute is a challenging program that affords students the opportunity to learn about the world, its different societies and cultures. Students in this program are not required to take as many years of math and science as students in the Medical Science Program.
The Liberal Arts & Science Institute, serves students who reside in the geographical catchment area. Students in the program choose among four main areas of study: Law/Leadership/Community Service, Pre-engineering/Technology, Performing Arts and Communication/Media Arts. Students in this programs with good grades as 95 or up average may request to switch to either the medical science or humanities program.
These are supported through the school's courtroom, robotics lab, chemistry lab, drama classrooms, and television studio.
Law department
Among the variety of courses taught at Midwood, the school has its own Law department, with a mock courtroom, housed on the 4th floor of the main building. Through the law department students have the opportunity to take Criminal and Constitutional law courses, participate in, and participate in Moot Court and Mock Trial competitions, in which the school works with select law firms throughout the city as they compete against other schools. Finally, through the department, students have the chance to take internships with the Kings County District Attorneys Office or other law firms in the city.Intel Science Talent Search Competition
Midwood has two classes that specialize in introducing students to scientific research, culminating in the creation of projects for the Intel Science Talent Search. In 1999, Midwood had the most semifinalists in the Intel STS and Siemens-Westinghouse Science & Technology Competition of any school in the country. The following year the school tied for first place in STS.Secondary schools of finalists and semi-finalists
School | City | State | Semi-finalists | Finalists |
Montgomery Blair High School | Silver Spring | MD | 183 | 32 |
Stuyvesant High School | New York | NY | 180 | 22 |
Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology | Alexandria | VA | 148 | 10 |
Bronx High School of Science | Bronx | NY | 130 | 9 |
Ward Melville High School | East Setauket | NY | 126 | 12 |
Paul D. Schreiber High School | Port Washington | NY | 82 | 6 |
Byram Hills High School | Armonk | NY | 78 | 15 |
Texas Academy of Mathematics and Science | Denton | TX | 76 | 11 |
The Harker School | San Jose | CA | 66 | 9 |
Jericho High School | Jericho | NY | 64 | 6 |
Great Neck North High School | Great Neck | NY | 62 | 7 |
North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics | Durham | NC | 61 | 3 |
Ossining High School | Ossining | NY | 53 | 2 |
Midwood High School | Brooklyn | NY | 50 | 5 |
Bergen County Academies | Hackensack | NJ | 49 | 6 |
Lawrence High School | Cedarhurst | NY | 49 | 3 |
Illinois Math and Science Academy | Aurora | IL | 43 | 9 |
Great Neck South High School | Great Neck | NY | 41 | 5 |
John F. Kennedy High School | Bellmore | NY | 29 | 3 |
Lynbrook High School | San Jose | CA | 25 | 5 |
Greenwich High School | Greenwich | CT | 22 | 3 |
Investment in technology
The school has been working to provide students with the latest technology for students to use. In addition to having Smart Boards in most of the class rooms, and class sets of IPads, the school has recently invested $1300 in a 3D Printer.Extracurricular activities
Sports
Midwood has several PSAL sports teams. They include teams in baseball, bowling, basketball, cricket, football, golf, cheerleading, handball, lacrosse, soccer, softball, swimming, tennis, track, wrestling, and volleyball.In 2018, the boys' lacrosse team won the city championship in their divisions, defeating Columbus High School.
In 2017, the girls' volleyball team won the city championship in their division by defeating Cardozo High School. In 2016, the Varsity Boys' Baseball team won the school's first "AAA" Division City Championship by defeating Tottenville High School at Yankee Stadium.
Midwood's handball team won 2 consecutive city championships in 2008 and 2009. Midwood Girls' Handball team won finals in 2009 and city championship in 2010. Midwood's lacrosse team has won several city championships, including 2006, 2007, and 2008. The team had made every championship appearance between 2007 and 2011 with 3 championship wins including an undefeated championship in 2011. Midwood HS Football Team who was coached by Alan G. Arbuse, was also back to back 1979 & 1980 City Champions and 1979 Metro Bowl Champions.
Midwood's girls' bowling team had gone into the semi-final in the past three years, and undefeated division championship. The Midwood boys' bowling team has also made the playoffs 3 times in last 4 years. Midwood's girls' swimming team had come into the play off in the past 14 years, and is considered one of the top teams within Brooklyn and New York City. Midwood also started the first Girls' Lacrosse team in Brooklyn.
The Midwood Boys' Volleyball Team, considered to be one of the best and the "team to beat" in the PSAL, has gone undefeated in their division for the past 13 years with 4 city championships in 1996, 2001, 2007, and 2009.
The Midwood Boys' Track and Field Team won its first-ever indoor track championship in winter 2008. Under coach Marc Cohen, the track and field team also managed to win its first ever outdoor track title in June 2010, upsetting some of the fastest high schools in the city and solidifying the legacy of Midwood Track and Field. They have also won their first-ever Cross Country title in November 2013
The Midwood Girls' Track and Field Team won their first ever Outdoor title Championship in May 2014.
The team is given the nickname "The Midwood Hornet" or simply "Hornet".
Clubs
Midwood has nearly 100 clubs, the including Key Club, Traditional Cuisine Club, Culture Club, Asian Society, Akiva Club, Philosophy, Amnesty International, Alternative Music Appreciation Club, Latin Club, Young Democrats, West Indian Society Club Environmental Club, Gay-Straight Alliance, Kpop Club, Anime Club, Black Heritage Alliance, Young Writer's Club, Women in Power Club, Model Congress, ASPCA Club, Jewish club, Model United Nations, Hellenist Society, Slavic Society, Eastern Orthodox, Snowboard Club, The Midwood Political Action Club, Robotic Club and Video Game Club. Students complained that the school didn't have an official Math Team. In response, an unofficial group for students with an interest and talent in math was established.SING!
SING!, an annual student-run inter-school musical theater competition was conceived at Midwood by Bella Tillis, a music teacher, in 1947. It is still being produced at Midwood. It's also a tradition for many New York City High School seniors, juniors, and "so-fresh" who compete against each other to put on the best performance at their own school. The 1989 movie Sing, which starred Lorraine Bracco, was based on SING!. SING has been responsible for hours of dedication and hard work, as well as fierce competition, among New York City's high school students.In the summer of 2004, the film The Squid and the Whale was filmed in Midwood High School's auditorium, using students from the school's Drama Club as extra seat-fillers, in 80s-style costumes. The production also used background scenes on the stage that had been painted for the Drama Club's production of Bye Bye Birdie two months prior. The film production crew also enlisted the help of a former Drama Club and SING! lighting manager to help them light the stage for the scene.
''Argus''
The Argus, Midwood's official school newspaper, publishes articles written by students. It is published monthly. Editors are chosen by Midwood's journalism teacher in June from among the junior Journalism class. It contains different things such as news, features, op-ed, arts & sports, photography, school info, and web info, all per student request/input, as well as updated news about PSAL sport events and other events occurring in and outside the school. The newspaper also has its own website.Senior seminar/Independent research studies
Midwood High School offers a new program to most senior students who need to fill up their schedule with 5.5 hours of class under the new department of education law that was taken into effect September 2012. During students free periods, they would be offered a multitude of special programs to do for class credit. Examples include SING, peer tutoring, monitoring for a teacher, and certain clubs that are offered in Midwood High School. Students fill out a time card for the number of hours that they have done in school. Students need to get a certain number of hours to pass the class, and it counts as a class credit.Notable people
Notable alumni
- Woody Allen, Academy Award-winning film director and screenwriter, Academy Award-nominated actor, Grammy Award winner
- Antonio Anderson, NFL player
- Steve Augeri, singer, briefly attended Midwood
- Victor Axelrod, musician, producer, arranger and engineer
- Noah Baumbach, Academy Award-nominated writer, director, and independent filmmaker
- Paul Ben-Victor, actor
- Joan Berkowitz, chemist
- Jacques Berlinerblau, professor at Georgetown University and writer
- Andrew D. Bernstein, Senior Director of NBA Photos
- Richard J. Bernstein, philosopher who teaches at The New School for Social Research
- Steve Bracey, NBA basketball player
- Al Brodax, film and television producer
- Richard Campagna, 2004 Libertarian Party Vice Presidential candidate
- Mark Cane, climate scientist and professor at Columbia University
- Judi Chamberlin, activist, leader, organizer, public speaker and educator in the psychiatric survivors movement
- Robin Alta Charo, professor of law and bioethics
- Roz Chast, cartoonist
- Humayun Chaudhry, physician and President and CEO of the Federation of State Medical Boards of the United States
- Tony Colorito, football player for the Denver Broncos of the NFL
- Didi Conn, stage, screen, and television actress, who played Frenchy in the original cast of Grease
- John Corigliano, Academy Award, Pulitzer Prize for Music, and Grammy Award-winning composer
- Richard Cummings, author, playwright, politician, and academic
- Richard Davidson, professor of Psychology and Psychiatry at the University of Wisconsin–Madison; founder and Chair of the Center for Investigating Healthy Minds
- Carole Demas, actress, singer, producer, and writer
- J. M. DeMatteis, writer of comic books, television, and novels
- Veronica Driscoll, nurse and labor organizer
- Phil Dusenberry, advertising executive for the BBDO advertising agency.
- Hilly Elkins, theater and film producer
- Ramblin' Jack Elliott, folk singer and performer
- Walter Ferguson, visual artist who painted at least two murals at Midwood
- Martin J. Fettman, astronaut
- Felice Frankel, photographer of scientific images
- Stephen J. Friedman, film producer
- Stewart D. Friedman, author and professor at the Wharton School of Business at the University of Pennsylvania
- Henry Gross, singer-songwriter; Sha Na Na
- Robert Grossman, visual artist
- Madeleine Grumet, academic in curriculum theory and feminist theory
- Morty Gunty, comedian and actor
- Gerald Gutierrez, Tony Award-winning stage and film director
- Lee Israel, author, literary forger, and thief
- Hakeem Jeffries, U.S. Congressman
- June Jordan, poet
- Selna Kaplan, pediatric endocrinologist and a professor of pediatrics at the University of California, San Francisco
- Karl Katz, art historian, curator, and museum director
- Johnny Kelly, drummer for Type O Negative, Danzig, A Pale Horse Named Death, Seventh Void
- Arthur Komar, theoretical physicist, specializing in general relativity and the search for quantum gravity
- Rochelle Lazarus, Chairman Emeritus of Ogilvy & Mather
- Emmanuel Lewis, actor
- Michael Lynne, CEO of New Line Cinema, vintner
- Robert Markowitz, movie and television director
- Wentworth Miller, Golden Globe Award-nominated actor
- Joel Moses, Israeli-American MIT provost
- Eric Nadel, Texas Rangers radio announcer since 1979
- Arthur Nersesian, novelist, playwright, and poet
- Kevin Parker, New York State Senator
- Steven M. Podos, professor/chairman of the Department of Ophthalmology, Mount Sinai School of Medicine and Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City
- Irma S. Raker, lawyer and Judge of the Maryland Court of Appeals
- Adam Richman, TV host of Man v. Food
- Neil Rosenshein, operatic tenor
- Judy Rothman, Emmy Award-winning television writer, author, and lyricist
- Howard J. Rubenstein, public relations expert
- Safaree Samuels, rapper, songwriter, and television personality
- Jack Sarfatti, theoretical physicist
- Andre-Michel Schub, pianist
- Erich Segal, author, professor, Academy Award-nominated screenwriter
- Juliet Popper Shaffer, psychologist, statistician, and statistics educator, professor emerita at the University of California, Berkeley
- James S. Shapiro, Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University
- Mimi Sheraton, food critic
- Mitchell Silver, Commissioner of the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation
- Heather Simms, actress
- Maxine Singer, geneticist, President Emerita of the Carnegie Institution of Washington
- Shaun Smith, NFL football player
- Valerie Smith, Professor Emeritus, Princeton University; President, Swarthmore College
- Stephen J. Solarz, U.S. Congressman, 1975–93
- Ellen Spolsky, Professor Emerita of English at Bar-Ilan University, Israel
- Jason Starr, novelist
- Chris Stein, guitarist from rock band Blondie
- Jordan G. Stone, TV producer - created Discovery series Stunt Junkies
- Ronald Sukenick, writer and literary theorist
- Sy Syms, businessman and philanthropist
- Bill Thompson, New York City Comptroller
- Elliot Tiber, artist and screenwriter, helped arrange Woodstock festival in Bethel, New York
- Amirah Vann, actress and singer
- Richard Warshak, psychologist, author, and public speaker
- Myron Weiner, political scientist and scholar of South Asia, MIT
- Sheila Wellington, author, professor, and President of Catalyst
- Sean Wilentz, Professor of History, Princeton University
- Victor Williams, actor
- Zach Zarba, NBA referee
- Zombie Juice, rapper, member of Flatbush ZOMBiES.
Notable staff
- Herb Bernstein, record producer, composer, arranger, and conductor.